Six Picks: Recommendations from the Monitor staff

HBO’s World War II blockbuster ‘The Pacific,’ Norah Jones’s new tour, ‘Up in the Air’ on DVD, and more.

March 8, 2010

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For the latest revisiting of World War II, tune into 'The Pacific,' from Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, HBO’s blockbuster 10-part series debuting March 14 at 9 p.m.

HBO

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Brave hearts

Images of young soldiers slogging through the heat and witnessing combat horror in foreign lands is always a good reality check for a generation ready to complain about the temperature of a Starbucks latte. For the latest revisiting of World War II and what the “greatest generation” went through to preserve the freedoms many of us enjoy today, tune into “The Pacific,” from Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, HBO’s blockbuster 10-part series debuting March 14 at 9 p.m.

For the love of wolves

In this Smithsonian Channel documentary, “Running With Wolves,” biologist and mother Gudrun Pflueger returns to the mountain terrain of western Canada to research some of the world’s most elusive wolves. A sequel to last year’s “A Woman Among Wolves,” the show details her struggle against a life-threatening illness and how her effort to raise awareness of these misunderstood animals has sped her return to health. Airs March 7 at 8 p.m. following an encore presentation of “A Woman Among Wolves.”

Norah’s tour

Sultry songstress Norah Jones launches her US tour this week, showcasing her chart-topping album, “The Fall,” released by EMI’s Blue Note Records last November. The 36-city tour opens in the Midwest and proceeds to both coasts through May. For more information go to: www.norahjones.com/tour/.

The antihero

In “Up in the Air” (out on DVD March 9), George Clooney’s Ryan Bingham is a “career transition consultant,” i.e., a guy who does the dirty work of corporate bosses too cowardly to fire their own employees. The movie’s title is an apt description of Ryan’s existential condition, and his literal one, too, since he spends on average 322 days a year on the job, often on planes. Ryan is an antihero for these parlous times, and the movie for the most part scrupulously avoids sentimentality.